Starrmartin6686
Accordingly, a promising architecture of passive nanoparticle-carrying core and thermoresponsive shell was realized successfully.The complex effects of nanoparticles on a thermosetting material based on an anhydride cured DGEBA/boehmite nanocomposite with different particle concentrations are considered. A combination of X-ray scattering, calorimetry, including fast scanning calorimetry and temperature modulated calorimetry, and dielectric spectroscopy was employed to study the structure, the vitrification kinetics and the molecular dynamics of the nanocomposites. For the first time in the literature, for an epoxy-based composite, a detailed analysis of the X-ray data was carried out. Moreover, the unfilled polymer was found to be intrinsically heterogeneous, showing regions with different crosslinking densities, indicated by two separate dynamic glass transitions. The glass transition temperature decreases with increasing nanoparticle concentration, resulting from a change in the crosslinking density. Moreover, on the one hand, for the nanocomposites, the incorporation of nanofiller increased the number of mobile segments for low nanoparticle concentrations, due to the altered crosslinking density. On the other hand, for higher loading degrees, the number of mobile segments decreased, resulting from the formation of an immobilized interphase (RAF). The simultaneous mobilization and immobilization of the segmental dynamics cannot be separated unambiguously. By taking the sample with the highest number of mobile segments as a reference state, it was possible to estimate the amount of RAF.Deterministic assembly of metallic nanoparticles (e.g. gold nanoparticles) into prescribed configurations has promising applications in many fields such as biosensing and drug delivery. DNA-directed bottom-up assembly has demonstrated unparalleled capability to precisely organize metallic nanoparticles into assemblies of designer configurations. However, the fabrication of assemblies comprising delicate nanoparticle arrangements, especially across large dimensions (e.g. micron size), has remained challenging. In this report, we have designed DNA origami hexagon tiles that are capable of assembling into higher-order networks of honeycomb arrays or tubes with dimensions up to several microns. The versatile addressability of the unit tile enables precise and periodic positioning of nanoparticles onto these higher-order DNA origami frame structures. Overall, we have constructed a series of 9 gold nanoparticle architectures with programmable configurations ranging from nanometer-sized clusters to micrometer-sized lattices. We believe these architectures shall hold great application potential in numerous biomedical fields.The base-catalyzed oxirane ring opening reaction with thiol nucleophiles is frequently employed for post-polymerization modification of polymeric glycidyl scaffolds. Due to various beneficial attributes, it is often referred to as a 'click' reaction. However, the tendency of the free thiol molecules to undergo oxidative dimerization through the formation of a disulfide bond under ambient conditions results in partial consumption of the sulfhydryl precursors. Therefore, an excess of the thiol precursors is typically used to counterbalance the side-reaction. This violates the equimolar stoichiometry conditions required for 'click' reactions in the context of polymer synthesis. read more Here, we show that commercially available disulfides can be used to generate the necessary thiolate nucleophiles in situ through the reduction of the SS-bond with sodium borohydride. Such activation strategy eliminates the sulfhydryl oxidation mechanism to disulfides and ensures that the post-synthesis functionalization of epoxy polymers can be performed under equimolar 'click' conditions.Human adipose-derived stem cells (hASCs) cultured for 5 passages were filtered through nylon (NY) mesh filter membranes coated with and without extracellular matrix proteins to obtain the permeation solution. Subsequently, the culture media were filtered via the membranes to obtain the recovery solution. Then, the membranes were cultured in cell culture medium to obtain the migrated cells from the membranes. The hASCs in the permeation solution, through any type of NY mesh filter membrane having 11 and 20 μm pore sizes, had lower osteogenic differentiation ability than conventional hASCs cultured on tissue culture polystyrene (TCP) dishes for passage 5, whereas the hASCs purified by the membrane migration method through NY mesh filter membranes coated with recombinant vitronectin, which have 11 and 20 μm pore sizes, showed a higher proliferation speed as well as higher osteogenic differentiation potential than the conventional hASCs cultured on TCP dishes for passage 5. The membrane filtration and migration methods would be useful for cell sorting for specific cells, such as hASCs with high proliferation and high osteogenic differentiation ability, which do not need antibody binding or genetic modification of the cells for the specific isolation of the cells.The monostable Cassie state is a favorable wetting state for superhydrophobic materials, in which water drops can automatically transfer from the Wenzel wetting state to the Cassie wetting state, such that as a consequence the water repellency can be maintained. Drop impact phenomena are ubiquitous in nature and of critical importance in industry, and previous works show that the efficiency of self-cleaning and dropwise condensation could benefit from drop impact on monostable surfaces. However, whether such a feature is sufficiently robust remains unclear when the temperature of the surface is taken into consideration. Here, we report that there exists a lower bound of the temperature of the surface, under which a transition from the Cassie wetting state to the Wenzel wetting state arises. By varying the temperature of the surface, it is found that the solid-liquid wetting region could be regulated. Based on thermodynamics, we propose a model to predict the controllable wetting region, and we show that the gradual transition of the wetting state is a result of the accumulation of droplets on the nanoscale. Connections between the dynamics occurring at the solid-liquid interfaces on the microscale and the condensation occurring in the nanotextures are constructed. These results deepen our understanding of the breakdown of superhydrophobicity under dynamic impinging in high humidity. Moreover, this study will shed new light on the applications for controllable liquid deposition and surface decoration, such as catalysts on the superhydrophobic surfaces.